.TH FD 1
.SH NAME
fd \- find entries in the filesystem
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B fd
.RB [ \-HIEsiaLp0hV ]
.RB [ \-d
.IR depth ]
.RB [ \-t
.IR filetype ]
.RB [ \-e
.IR ext ]
.RB [ \-E
.IR exclude ]
.RB [ \-c
.IR when ]
.RB [ \-j
.IR num ]
.RB [ \-x
.IR cmd ]
.RI [ pattern
.RI [ path... ]]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B fd
is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to
.BR find (1).
.P
By default
.B fd
uses regular expressions for the pattern. However, this can be changed to use simple glob patterns
with the '\-\-glob' option.
.P
By default
.B fd
will exclude hidden files and directories, as well as any files that match gitignore rules
or ignore rules in .ignore or .fdignore files.
.P
If you wish to search all files in a specific directory, you can use '' or . as the search pattern,
to match all files. Or you can use the '\-\-search\-path' option to specify the path(s) instead of
the positional parameter.
.P
Options may be given anywhere on the command line.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.B \-H, \-\-hidden
Include hidden files and directories in the search results
(default: hidden files and directories are skipped). The flag can be overridden with '--no-hidden'.
.IP
Ignored files are still excluded unless \-\-no\-ignore or \-\-no\-ignore\-vcs
is also used.
.TP
.B \-I, \-\-no\-ignore
Show search results from files and directories that would otherwise be ignored by
.RS
.IP \[bu] 2
.I .gitignore
.IP \[bu]
.I .git/info/exclude
.IP \[bu]
The global gitignore configuration (by default
.IR $HOME/.config/git/ignore )
.IP \[bu]
.I .ignore
.IP \[bu]
.I .fdignore
.IP \[bu]
The global fd ignore file (usually
.I $HOME/.config/fd/ignore
)
.RE
.IP
The flag can be overridden with '--ignore'.
.TP
.B \-u, \-\-unrestricted
Perform an unrestricted search, including ignored and hidden files. This is an alias for '--hidden --no-ignore'.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-ignore\-vcs
Show search results from files and directories that would otherwise be ignored by gitignore files
including
.IR  .gitignore ,
.IR  .git/info/exclude ,
and the global gitignore configuration
.RI ( core.excludesFile
git setting, which defaults to
.IR $HOME/.config/git/ignore ).
The flag can be overridden with '--ignore-vcs'.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-require\-git
Do not require a git repository to respect gitignores. By default, fd will only
respect global gitignore rules, .gitignore rules and local exclude rules if fd
detects that you are searching inside a git repository. This flag allows you to
relax this restriction such that fd will respect all git related ignore rules
regardless of whether you’re searching in a git repository or not. The flag can
be overridden with '--require-git'.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-ignore\-parent
Show search results from files and directories that would otherwise be ignored by gitignore files in
parent directories.
.TP
.B \-s, \-\-case\-sensitive
Perform a case-sensitive search. By default, fd uses case-insensitive searches, unless the
pattern contains an uppercase character (smart case).
.TP
.B \-i, \-\-ignore\-case
Perform a case-insensitive search. By default, fd uses case-insensitive searches, unless the
pattern contains an uppercase character (smart case).
.TP
.B \-g, \-\-glob
Perform a glob-based search instead of a regular expression search.
If combined with the '\-\-full-path' option, '**' can be used to match multiple path components.
.TP
.B \-\-regex
Perform a regular-expression based search (default). This can be used to override --glob.
.TP
.B \-F, \-\-fixed\-strings
Treat the pattern as a literal string instead of a regular expression. Note that this also
performs substring comparison. If you want to match on an exact filename, consider using '\-\-glob'.
.TP
.BI "\-\-and " pattern
Add additional required search patterns, all of which must be matched. Multiple additional
patterns can be specified. The patterns are regular expressions, unless '\-\-glob'
or '\-\-fixed\-strings' is used.
.TP
.B \-a, \-\-absolute\-path
Shows the full path starting from the root as opposed to relative paths.
The flag can be overridden with '--relative-path'.
.TP
.B \-l, \-\-list\-details
Use a detailed listing format like 'ls -l'. This is basically an alias
for '--exec-batch ls -l' with some additional 'ls' options. This can be used
to see more metadata, to show symlink targets and to achieve a deterministic
sort order.
.TP
.B \-L, \-\-follow
By default, fd does not descend into symlinked directories. Using this flag, symbolic links are
also traversed. The flag can be overridden with '--no-follow'.
.TP
.B \-p, \-\-full\-path
By default, the search pattern is only matched against the filename (or directory name). Using
this flag, the
.I pattern
is matched against the full path.
.TP
.B \-0, \-\-print0
Separate search results by the null character (instead of newlines). Useful for piping results to
.IR xargs .
.TP
.B \-\-max\-results count
Limit the number of search results to 'count' and quit immediately.
.TP
.B \-1
Limit the search to a single result and quit immediately. This is an alias for '--max-results=1'.
.TP
.B \-q, \-\-quiet
When the flag is present, the program does not print anything and will instead exit with a code of 0 if there is at least one search result.
Otherwise, the exit code will be 1.
This is mainly for usage in scripts and can be faster than checking for output because the search can be stopped early after the first match.
.B \-\-has\-results
can be used as an alias.
.TP
.B \-\-show-errors
Enable the display of filesystem errors for situations such as insufficient
permissions or dead symlinks.
.TP
.B \-\-strip-cwd-prefix [when]
By default, relative paths are prefixed with './' when -x/--exec,
-X/--exec-batch, or -0/--print0 are given, to reduce the risk of a
path starting with '-' being treated as a command line option. Use
this flag to change this behavior. If this flag is used without a value,
it is equivalent to passing "always". Possible values are:
.RS
.IP never
Never strip the ./ at the beginning of paths
.IP always
Always strip the ./ at the beginning of paths
.IP auto
Only strip if used with --exec, --exec-batch, or --print0. That is, it resets to the default behavior.
.RE
.TP
.B \-\-one\-file\-system, \-\-mount, \-\-xdev
By default, fd will traverse the file system tree as far as other options dictate. With this flag, fd ensures that it does not descend into a different file system than the one it started in. Comparable to the -mount or -xdev filters of find(1).
.TP
.B \-h, \-\-help
Print help information.
.TP
.B \-V, \-\-version
Print version information.
.TP
.BI "\-d, \-\-max\-depth " d
Limit directory traversal to at most
.I d
levels of depth. By default, there is no limit on the search depth.
.TP
.BI "\-\-min\-depth " d
Only show search results starting at the given depth. See also: '--max-depth' and '--exact-depth'.
.TP
.BI "\-\-exact\-depth " d
Only show search results at the exact given depth. This is an alias for '--min-depth <depth> --max-depth <depth>'.
.TP
.B \-\-prune
Do not traverse into matching directories.
.TP
.BI "\-t, \-\-type " filetype
Filter search by type:
.RS
.IP "f, file"
regular files
.IP "d, dir, directory"
directories
.IP "l, symlink"
symbolic links
.IP "b, block-device"
block devices
.IP "c, char-device"
character devices
.IP "s, socket"
sockets
.IP "p, pipe"
named pipes (FIFOs)
.IP "x, executable"
executable (files)
.IP "e, empty"
empty files or directories
.RE

.RS
This option can be specified more than once to include multiple file types.
Searching for '--type file --type symlink' will show both regular files as well as
symlinks. Note that the 'executable' and 'empty' filters work differently: '--type
executable' implies '--type file' by default. And '--type empty' searches for
empty files and directories, unless either '--type file' or '--type directory' is
specified in addition.

Examples:
  - Only search for files:
      fd --type file …
      fd -tf …
  - Find both files and symlinks
      fd --type file --type symlink …
      fd -tf -tl …
  - Find executable files:
      fd --type executable
      fd -tx
  - Find empty files:
      fd --type empty --type file
      fd -te -tf
  - Find empty directories:
      fd --type empty --type directory
      fd -te -td
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-e, \-\-extension " ext
Filter search results by file extension
.IR ext .
This option can be used repeatedly to allow for multiple possible file extensions.

If you want to search for files without extension, you can use the regex '^[^.]+$'
as a normal search pattern.
.TP
.BI "\-E, \-\-exclude " pattern
Exclude files/directories that match the given glob pattern.
This overrides any other ignore logic.
Multiple exclude patterns can be specified.
Examples:
  \-\-exclude '*.pyc'
  \-\-exclude node_modules
.TP
.BI "\-\-ignore-file " path
Add a custom ignore-file in '.gitignore' format.
These files have a low precedence.
.TP
.BI "\-c, \-\-color " when
Declare
.I when
to colorize search results:
.RS
.IP auto
Colorize output when standard output is connected to terminal (default).
.IP never
Do not colorize output.
.IP always
Always colorize output.
.RE
.TP
.B "\-\-hyperlink
Specify whether the output should use terminal escape codes to indicate a hyperlink to a
file url pointing to the path.

The value can be auto, always, or never.

Currently, the default is "never", and if the option is used without an argument "auto" is
used. In the future this may be changed to "auto" and "always".
.RS
.IP auto
Only output hyperlinks if color is also enabled, as a proxy for whether terminal escape
codes are acceptable.
.IP never
Never output hyperlink escapes.
.IP always
Always output hyperlink escapes, regardless of color settings.
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-j, \-\-threads " num
Set number of threads to use for searching & executing (default: number of available CPU cores).
.TP
.BI "\-S, \-\-size " size
Limit results based on the size of files using the format
.I <+-><NUM><UNIT>
.RS
.IP '+'
file size must be greater than or equal to this
.IP '-'
file size must be less than or equal to this
.P
If neither '+' nor '-' is specified, file size must be exactly equal to this.
.IP 'NUM'
The numeric size (e.g. 500)
.IP 'UNIT'
The units for NUM. They are not case-sensitive.
Allowed unit values:
.RS
.IP 'b'
bytes
.IP 'k'
kilobytes (base ten, 10^3 = 1000 bytes)
.IP 'm'
megabytes
.IP 'g'
gigabytes
.IP 't'
terabytes
.IP 'ki'
kibibytes (base two, 2^10 = 1024 bytes)
.IP 'mi'
mebibytes
.IP 'gi'
gibibytes
.IP 'ti'
tebibytes
.RE
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-\-changed-within " date|duration
Filter results based on the file modification time.
Files with modification timestamps greater than the argument will be returned.
The argument can be provided as a duration (\fI10h, 1d, 35min\fR) or as a specific point
in time as full RFC3339 format with time zone, as a date or datetime in the
local time zone (\fIYYYY-MM-DD\fR or \fIYYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS\fR), or as the prefix '@'
followed by the number of seconds since the Unix epoch (@[0-9]+).
\fB\-\-change-newer-than\fR,
.B --newer
or
.B --changed-after
can be used as aliases.

Examples:
  \-\-changed-within 2weeks
  \-\-change-newer-than "2018-10-27 10:00:00"
  \-\-newer 2018-10-27
  \-\-changed-after @1704067200
.TP
.BI "\-\-changed-before " date|duration
Filter results based on the file modification time.
Files with modification timestamps less than the argument will be returned.
The argument can be provided as a duration (\fI10h, 1d, 35min\fR) or as a specific point
in time as full RFC3339 format with time zone, as a date or datetime in the
local time zone (\fIYYYY-MM-DD\fR or \fIYYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS\fR), or as the prefix '@'
followed by the number of seconds since the Unix epoch (@[0-9]+).
.B --change-older-than
or
.B --older
can be used as aliases.

Examples:
  \-\-changed-before "2018-10-27 10:00:00"
  \-\-change-older-than 2weeks
  \-\-older @1704067200
.TP
.BI "-o, \-\-owner " [user][:group]
Filter files by their user and/or group. Format: [(user|uid)][:(group|gid)]. Either side
is optional. Precede either side with a '!' to exclude files instead.

Examples:
  \-\-owner john
  \-\-owner :students
  \-\-owner "!john:students"
.TP
.BI "-C, \-\-base\-directory " path
Change the current working directory of fd to the provided path. This means that search results will
be shown with respect to the given base path. Note that relative paths which are passed to fd via the
positional \fIpath\fR argument or the \fB\-\-search\-path\fR option will also be resolved relative to
this directory.
.TP
.BI "\-\-path\-separator " separator
Set the path separator to use when printing file paths. The default is the OS-specific separator
('/' on Unix, '\\' on Windows).
.TP
.BI "\-\-search\-path " search\-path
Provide paths to search as an alternative to the positional \fIpath\fR argument. Changes the usage to
\'fd [FLAGS/OPTIONS] \-\-search\-path PATH \-\-search\-path PATH2 [PATTERN]\'
.TP
.BI "\-\-format " fmt
Specify a template string that is used for printing a line for each file found.

The following placeholders are substituted into the string for each file before printing:
.RS
.IP {}
path (of the current search result)
.IP {/}
basename
.IP {//}
parent directory
.IP {.}
path without file extension
.IP {/.}
basename without file extension
.IP {{
literal '{' (an escape sequence)
.IP }}
literal '}' (an escape sequence)
.P
Notice that you can use "{{" and "}}" to escape "{" and "}" respectively, which is especially
useful if you need to include the literal text of one of the above placeholders.
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-x, \-\-exec " command
.RS
Execute
.I command
for each search result in parallel (use --threads=1 for sequential command execution).

Note that all subsequent positional arguments are considered to be arguments to the
.I command
- not to fd.
It is therefore recommended to place the \-x/\-\-exec option last. Alternatively, you can supply
a ';' argument to end the argument list and continue with more fd options.
Most shells require ';' to be escaped: '\\;'.
This option can be specified multiple times, in which case all commands are run for each
file found, in the order they are provided. In that case, you must supply a ';' argument for
all but the last commands.

If parallelism is enabled, the order commands will be executed in is non-deterministic. And even with
--threads=1, the order is determined by the operating system and may not be what you expect. Thus, it is
recommended that you don't rely on any ordering of the results.

Before executing the command, any placeholder patterns in the command are replaced with the
corresponding values for the current file. The same placeholders are used as in the "\-\-format"
option.

If no placeholder is present, an implicit "{}" at the end is assumed.

If --print0 is also given, then a null character (\\0) will be printed between the output for each found entry.
This allows another program to easily distinguish the output for each file if the command(s) produce multiple lines.

Examples:

  - find all *.zip files and unzip them:

        fd -e zip -x unzip

  - find *.h and *.cpp files and run "clang-format -i .." for each of them:

        fd -e h -e cpp -x clang-format -i

  - Convert all *.jpg files to *.png files:

        fd -e jpg -x convert {} {.}.png

  - Run stat for each *.txt file, separated by null characters

        fd -0 -e txt -x stat
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-X, \-\-exec-batch " command
.RS
Execute
.I command
once, with all search results as arguments.

The order of the arguments is non-deterministic and should not be relied upon.

This uses the same placeholders as "\-\-format" and "\-\-exec", but instead of expanding
once per command invocation each argument containing a placeholder is expanding for every
file in a batch and passed as separate arguments.

If no placeholder is present, an implicit "{}" at the end is assumed.

Like \-\-exec, subsequent arguments are assumed to be part of
.I command
until either the end of command arguments or a ';' argument. See above.

Like \-\-exec, this can be used multiple times, in which case each command will be run in
the order given.

Examples:

  - Find all test_*.py files and open them in your favorite editor:

        fd -g 'test_*.py' -X vim

    Note that this executes a single "vim" process with all search results as arguments.

  - Find all *.rs files and count the lines with "wc -l ...":

        fd -e rs -X wc -l
.RE
.TP
.BI "\-\-batch-size " size
Maximum number of arguments to pass to the command given with -X. If the number of results is
greater than the given size, the command given with -X is run again with remaining arguments. A
batch size of zero means there is no limit (default), but note that batching might still happen
due to OS restrictions on the maximum length of command lines.
.SH PATTERN SYNTAX
The regular expression syntax used by fd is documented here:

    https://docs.rs/regex/1.0.0/regex/#syntax

The glob syntax is documented here:

    https://docs.rs/globset/#syntax
.SH ENVIRONMENT
.TP
.B LS_COLORS
Determines how to colorize search results, see
.BR dircolors (1) .
.TP
.B NO_COLOR
Disables colorized output.
.TP
.B XDG_CONFIG_HOME, HOME
Used to locate the global ignore file. If
.B XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is set, use
.IR $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fd/ignore .
Otherwise, use
.IR $HOME/.config/fd/ignore .
.SH FILES
.TP
.B .fdignore
This file works similarly to a .gitignore file anywhere in the searched tree and specifies patterns
that should be excluded from the search. However, this file is specific to fd, and will be used even
if the --no-ignore-vcs option is used.
.TP
.B $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fd/ignore
Global ignore file. Unless ignore mode is turned off (such as with --no-ignore)
ignore entries in this file will be ignored, as if it was an .fdignore file in the
current directory.
.SH EXAMPLES
.TP
.RI "Find files and directories that match the pattern '" needle "':"
$ fd needle
.TP
.RI "Start a search in a given directory (" /var/log "):"
$ fd nginx /var/log
.TP
.RI "Find all Python files (all files with the extension " .py ") in the current directory:"
$ fd -e py
.TP
.RI "Open all search results with vim:"
$ fd pattern -X vim
.SH Tips and Tricks
.IP \[bu]
If you add ".git/" to your global ignore file ($XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fd/ignore), then
".git" folders will be ignored by default, even when the --hidden option is used.
.IP \[bu]
You can use a shell alias or a wrapper script in order to pass desired flags to fd
by default. For example if you do not like the default behavior of respecting gitignore,
you can use
`alias fd="/usr/bin/fd --no-ignore-vcs"`
in your .bashrc to create an alias for fd that doesn't ignore git files by default.
.SH BUGS
Bugs can be reported on GitHub: https://github.com/sharkdp/fd/issues
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR find (1)
